Which Wellue Oximeter Should You Buy? 5 Models Lab-Tested

Brent Baker

Brent Baker / February 17, 2026

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Three Wellue oximeters are compared on a bed with their boxes. Text highlights accuracy testing. Two devices show +0.2% Bias Perfect, the third shows +1.0% Bias Reads High. Green checkmark indicates accuracy.
  • Medical Disclaimer: I am a researcher, not a doctor. This review is based on personal data testing and is for informational purposes only. It does not constitute medical advice or diagnosis. Always consult a medical professional for health concerns.

As someone who has personally struggled with sleep apnea, I know the anxiety of waking up exhausted, nursing a headache, and wondering why. I also know the frustration of buying a overnight pulse oximeter out of desperation, only to find out the data is junk.

To find the truth, I spent the last two months sleeping with over 20+ continuous pulse oximeters. Each device was compared against our $1500 Nonin 3150 Gold Standard blood oxygen monitor for three nights each.

Out of the 5 Wellue devices we tested, only one came out on top. Here is the full break-down of the most popular Wellue continuous pulse oximeters.

A man sleeps in bed next to a nightstand with a lit lamp. Arrows label his wrist as Gold Standard, his body as Me, and a device on his hand as Wellue.

The rings are super comfortable, but only one device in this lineup earned our “Top Pick”.

Top Pick: Checkme O2 Max

The Checkme O2 Max provided oxygen monitoring accuracy, achieving a flawless +0.2% agreement bias and a 90.7/100 Overall O2 Score against our $1,500 hospital reference monitor. As an FDA-Cleared Class II medical device with a 72-hour battery, it is the ultimate tool for accurately troubleshooting CPAP therapy, tracking concerning overnight oxygen dips, or optimizing your sleep.

A person’s hand wearing a wrist device connected by a wire to a gray sensor clipped on their index finger, likely used for monitoring health metrics. The background is plain white.

Pros:

  • 90.7/100 on our Overall O2 Score in side-by-side test with reference
  • FDA Cleared as a Class ll medical device. Strict clinical trailed tested
  • Clean CSV export (huge if you care about data)
  • 72-Hour Battery: Last 3 full nights
  • Smart Vibration Alarm
  • 2 second recording intervals

Cons:

  • Stiff wrist clasp: secure, but tricky to put on one handed
  • Left-handed Orientation: Designed to be worn on your left hand only

Test Protocol (Simple Version)

  • Testing Disclaimer: FDA validation uses controlled hypoxia and arterial blood sampling. I didn’t do that. Instead, I used the next best real-world approach: simultaneous overnight benchmarking against a hospital-grade reference device.
  • The hospital-grade Nonin was wore on one hand, and a Wellue overnight monitor on the other
  • Every morning, I exported the raw data files from both blood oxygen monitors
  • Our custom built Python script cleaned, aligned, and compared the data line-by-line
  • All the metrics were averaged across 3 nights to reduce randomness

Why the Checkme O2 Max Won (The Deep Dive)

This is the how all five Wellue devices tested performed for our Overall O2 Score; showing how close they agreed with our hospital-grade pulse oximeter line-by-line.

Hardware, Buttons & Build Quality

When you pull the Checkme O2 Max out of the box, it immediately feels like a premium piece of hardware. It has a high-gloss black finish, sleek design lines, and a smooth, robust band. It is the “Tesla” of the pulse oximeter world.

A close-up of a persons wrist wearing a black wristband device with a rectangular top, connected to a gray cable. The background is plain and white.

The design logic is incredibly streamlined. The device is equipped with a crisp display on the face, a tactile power button on the side, and a dual-purpose port for charging and connecting to a computer if you don’t want to use the bluetooth.

A digital display showing SPO2 at 96 percent and a pulse rate of 91, likely from a medical device such as a pulse oximeter.
Screen that easily displays your oxygen levels and heart rate
Close-up of a black plastic game controller handle with a gray cord attached. There is a rectangular button and a circular symbol next to it on the top side of the controller. The background is plain white.
Very nice tactile power button

I personally enjoyed having a power button. Having the ability to start the monitoring when I got into settled into bed was nice. Some turn on automatically when sensing your skin touching.

However, the physical hardware does have two distinct annoyances you should know about:

The Clasp: The wrist clasp holds exceptionally well, meaning it will never fell off at night. But out of the box, it is mildly annoying to put on. You have to push quite hard to get it snapped onto your wrist, though it does get easier after several days of use. Might just be built for longevity.

A smart fitness watch with a black wristband is being charged. A blue arrow points to metal contact points on the inside of the band.
With that clasp, it is not coming off. Not even in a hurricane 😏

The Left-Hand orientation: This monitor is explicitly designed to be worn on your left hand. If you wore it on your right hand, the screen would not auto rotate.

The Pillow Test: Sleeping With It

Another big win for the Checkme O2 Max is the finger sensor design. Many oximeters I tested had a restrictive sensor that pinches your finger, leaving it throbbing by 3:00 AM. Because the “brain” of this device sits on your wrist, the photosensor itself is incredibly lightweight on your finger, it is less noticeable while sleeping.

The location of the sensor on your hand and how much pressure it exerts to stay on all night is crucial. After testing overnight oxygen monitors for a combined 480 hours, trust me—being able to bend your finger is a massive deal. This sensor sits in a less sensitive area—at the base of your finger and allows it to naturally bend while you sleep.

A persons finger with a device attached to it.
Wellue’s patented blood oxygen sensor in action. It was enjoyable to wear all night.

It uses red and infrared LEDs to measure your blood oxygen saturation, housed in a soft silicone ring.

Close-up of two hands holding a small gray object with two tiny electronic components or sensors attached inside. The components are square-shaped and positioned side by side.
Unique transmissive design with LED diode on the left and the photodetector on the right. It measures side-to-side through the base of your finger, instead of top-down.

The Smart Alarm (Positional Therapy)

If you have a health condition like obstructive sleep apnea, COPD, or if you are a biohacker trying to train yourself out of mouth-breathing, the “Smart Alarm” is a necessary feature. The sensor has a strong vibration motor built right into the finger ring.

If your oxygen saturation levels or heart rate drops below a certain threshold that you set in the app, it vibrates. You can easily adjust this vibration from very weak to very strong. This isn’t just an alarm; it’s like a biofeedback loop. It acts as positional therapy, gently nudging you to roll off your back and open your airway before your blood oxygen level plummets further, often without fully waking you up.

The App & Data Export (The Ultimate CPAP Troubleshooting Tool)

If you are currently using a CPAP machine and wondering, “Is this thing actually working?”—or if you are a biohacker who lives in spreadsheets—this is your device. The free ViHealth app is incredibly intuitive and syncs thousands of rows of overnight data in seconds. It is a genuinely well-built app. I am sure syncing 13 different devices to it and downloading dozens of raw data files gave it a run for its money, and is far beyond its intended use, but it performed flawlessly!

A smartphone screen shows the profile page of a health app in Guest mode. A Checkme O2 Max device is connected. Menu options include Membership Center, Users, Third Party Services, FAQ, and Feedback.

You get a crystal-clear data display of your pulse rate and any early warning signs of oxygen dropping. By simply clicking the share icon, you can export a clean CSV , PDF, or Binary file.

Oxygen Level Report showing graphs of oxygen levels, pulse rate, and motion over time, with tables summarizing statistics for oxygen level, pulse rate, and duration across different ranges.
The ViHealth app generates clean, doctor-ready reports in seconds, breaking down your exact time spent in specific oxygen zones and number of 3-4% drops (ODI).

The CSV file that the Vihealth app exports is clean and easy to work with.

A table showing time-stamped measurements with columns for time, oxygen level (all 90), pulse rate (around 50-51), motion, O2 reminder, and PR reminder (both 0); motion values vary for each entry.
CSV file from the Vihealth app

I did test ISO and Android versions of the app and they functioned identically.

Pro-Tip for Sleep Optimizers: You can take the Binary file from the Checkme O2 Max and overlay it with your CPAP data in software like OSCAR to see exactly what is moving the needle on your continuous monitoring charts. This format gives your healthcare provider granular data that works flawlessly in sleep analysis algorithms and rivals an at-home sleep study.

O2 Insight Pro Access

The Checkme O2 Max is one of a handful of devices that has access to the computer software version. It offers more detail on the second-by-second sleep graphs that the Vihealth app doesn’t give you.

Screenshot of a sleep study report showing patient data, a bar chart, and a line graph of SpO2 levels over time. The report includes summary statistics like average and lowest values, start/end times, and patient information fields.

Checkme O2 Max Testing Data

Before we give our final verdict, here is the Checkme 02 data from our lab test. The Checkme O2 Max achieved an incredible 99.6% Signal Stability and a mathematically perfect +0.2% Bias against our hospital-grade pulse oximeter.

A comparison table shows sleep study metrics for Nonin (Gold Standard) and Checkmeo2Max, with Checkmeo2Max accuracy scores highlighted. Overall accuracy is 90.7/100, and the bias error is labeled “PERFECT.”.

Chart Definitions

  • ODI (3% & 4%): The “Oxygen Desaturation Index” counts how many times your oxygen drops per hour. 3% is a mild dip; 4% is severe. The 3% is a more sensitive metric.
  • Time <90%: A timer counting every second you spent below 90% oxygen.
  • Time <88%: A timer counting every second you spent below 88% oxygen.
  • Lowest SPO2 (Nadir): The absolute lowest oxygen point of the night. We checked if the device caught this “rock bottom” moment or smoothed it over.
  • Bias: Shows the device’s “personality.” Positive (+) bias means it overestimates oxygen (optimist); Negative (-) means it underestimates it (pessimist).
  • Signal Stability: Measures how often the device stays within ±2% of the medical reference. High stability means it rarely loses its “lock” on your data.
  • Overall O2 Score: A 0–100 final grade. It heavily weights ODI and Stability to determine if the device is safe for medical tracking.

The Overall O2 Score is calculated by the following weights: 40%: ODI Accuracy (3% and 4% combined) 30%: Signal Stability (FDA-style ±2% agreement) 20%: Nadir Accuracy 10%: T90 Accuracy.

Show Nerdy Numbers All Done

The Verdict

I used to wake up every morning with a headache and zero energy, and I sincerely wish I had known about the Checkme O2 Max back then. After rigorously testing these oxygen monitors, this is the Wellue device I trust to catch the rapid oxygen drops that smartwatches completely miss. If you are tired of guessing why your sleep is broken, this gives you the exact second-by-second monitoring so you can finally get better sleep.

Wellue Checkme O2 Max

A hand with a device on it.

Pros:

  • 90.7/100 on our Overall O2 Score in side-by-side test with reference
  • FDA Cleared as a Class ll medical device. Strict clinical trailed tested
  • Clean CSV export (huge if you care about data)
  • 72-Hour Battery: Last 3 full nights
  • Smart Vibration Alarm
  • 2 second recording intervals

Cons:

  • Stiff wrist clasp: secure, but tricky to put on one handed
  • Left-handed Orientation: Designed to be worn on your left hand only

The Rest of the Wellue Lineup

The Checkme O2 Max took the top spot, but I tested them all. Let’s dive into the full showdown.

Two hands display different pulse oximeters attached to the index fingers. Each hand wears a wrist device connected by a wire to a sensor clipped on the finger, showing how the devices are used to measure blood oxygen levels.
Test devices next to the Nonin 3150

Here are the Score Cards for the rest of the Wellue pulse oximeters, showing how close they tracked our hospital-grade blood oxygen monitor.

Chart Definitions

  • ODI (3% & 4%): The “Oxygen Desaturation Index” counts how many times your oxygen drops per hour. 3% is a mild dip; 4% is severe. The 3% is a more sensitive metric.
  • Time <90%: A timer counting every second you spent below 90% oxygen.
  • Time <88%: A timer counting every second you spent below 88% oxygen.
  • Lowest SPO2 (Nadir): The absolute lowest oxygen point of the night. We checked if the device caught this “rock bottom” moment or smoothed it over.
  • Bias: Shows the device’s “personality.” Positive (+) bias means it overestimates oxygen (optimist); Negative (-) means it underestimates it (pessimist).
  • Signal Stability: Measures how often the device stays within ±2% of the medical reference. High stability means it rarely loses its “lock” on your data.
  • Overall O2 Score: A 0–100 final grade. It heavily weights ODI and Stability to determine if the device is safe for medical tracking.

The Overall O2 Score is calculated by the following weights: 40%: ODI Accuracy (3% and 4% combined) 30%: Signal Stability (FDA-style ±2% agreement) 20%: Nadir Accuracy 10%: T90 Accuracy.

Show Nerdy Numbers All Done

Well O2Ring S (Overall O2 Score 81.1)

Comfort: 10/10 — invisible

Like the original O2Ring , from our tests, it suffers from a slight optimistic bias (+1.0%), meaning it reads your oxygen slightly higher than reality. Who is it for? If you absolutely refuse to wear a wrist strap with finger sensor to bed, but you still want 1-second interval data and modern USB-C charging, the Wellue O2Ring S the best standalone ring on the market.

A black O2Ring Bluetooth pulse oximeter is placed in front of its white product box, which features an image of the device and icons indicating key functions on a plain white background.

Wellue O2Ring (Overall O2 Score 81.7)

Comfort: 10/10 — invisible

The original ring model actually had a “Perfect” mean bias (+0.7%). However, a perfect average doesn’t mean perfect tracking. It did not catch rapid desaturations like we hoped, missing over 51% of 3% drops.

It averages out nicely over the night, but smoothed over quick oxygen dip events, probably due to the 4s sample interval. But if you are just looking for a general sleep oxygen monitor on a budget, and comfort needs to be the highest then the Wellue O2Ring would be the one to grab.

A blue box labeled Wellue Viatom O2Ring Wearable Oxygen Monitor stands next to a black, oval-shaped electronic device with a display screen, both on a white background.

Wellue SleepU (Overall O2 Score 87.8)

Comfort: 9/10

Like the Checkme O2 Max, this uses the exact same finger sensor, but our tests show it reads slightly optimistic and emits an annoying (but brief) bright blue light when first turned on.

Who is it for? If you want a secure wrist-and-finger fit but need a device that is budget-friendly, nearly half the weight (31g vs 56g), and simplified with zero buttons, a good alternative is the Wellue SleepU.

A Wellue Sleep U Sleep Oxygen Monitor with a blue wristband and connected fingertip sensor is displayed next to its blue box packaging on a white background.

Wellue Checkme O2 Ultra (Overall O2 Score 87.3)

Comfort: 7/10

The Ultra features premium build quality and a incredibly satisfying magnetic charger, but our lab data shows it slightly smooths over rapid oxygen dips. It is also strictly locked to a left-hand display.

Who is it for? If you need hyper-fast apnea detection, skip this. But if you travel frequently, despise daily charging, and just want a general oxygen baseline backed by a massive 100+ hour battery life and four days of on-device memory, a good premium alternative would be the Checkme O2 Ultra.

A Wellue Checkme O2 Ultra wrist oxygen monitor is shown in front of its product box, with a wristband, display screen, and a finger sensor attached by a cable.

Bonus Data

Since we’ve already covered the final scores and how we tested them at a high-level, this next section is strictly for the data nerds who want to look a little more under the hood.

To get those exact scorecard calculations, we didn’t just read the back of the box. We spent hundreds of hours designing a rigorous testing protocol, meticulously controlling our variables, sleeping with them night-after-night and running line-by-line data comparisons against our $1,500 hospital pulse oximeter.

If you want to see exactly what that raw data looks like, below is the actual 3-Night Deviation Chart for the Checkme O2 Max.

How to Read this Chart

Think of the Blue Line as the device’s “Report Card.”

  • The Center Line (0): This is a perfect score. The device matched the medical equipment exactly.
  • The Pink Lines (+2 /-2): These are the “Guard Rails”. As long as the blue line stays between them, the Checkme O2 Max is considered perfect alignment with the hospital-grade device.
  • The Takeaway: Notice how the blue line spends almost the entire night safely inside the tracks. This is what reliability looks like.

Deviation Calculation

  • The “Zero-Blindspot” Formula: We calculate the deviation for every single second of sleep using this formula:
    • Deviation = SpO₂ (Reference) – SpO₂ (Test Device)
  • The “Safety Guard Rails” (ISO 80601-2-61): You will see the pink limit lines at ±2%. These aren’t arbitrary; they represent the International Standard (ARMS) for clinical pulse oximetry.
    • Why this matters: If the device’s line stays between these rails, it is agreeing with the hospital equipment.
  • Bias Direction (The “Life Saving” Metric):
    • Optimistic Bias (Negative Score): The line dips DOWN. Those are more dangerous because the device is reporting higher oxygen levels than you actually have, potentially masking a problem.
    • Pessimistic Bias (Positive Score): The line trends UP. This is safer because the device is slightly under-reading, ensuring you are alerted to drops early.
  • The “Fair Start” Protocol: To be 100% fair to the hardware, we surgically trim the first 5 minutes of every recording. This removes “warm-up” noise and ensures we only grade the device once it has stabilized on our finger.

Wellue Checkme O2 Max

A hand with a device on it.

Pros:

  • 90.7/100 on our Overall O2 Score in side-by-side test with reference
  • FDA Cleared as a Class ll medical device. Strict clinical trailed tested
  • Clean CSV export (huge if you care about data)
  • 72-Hour Battery: Last 3 full nights
  • Smart Vibration Alarm
  • 2 second recording intervals

Cons:

  • Stiff wrist clasp: secure, but tricky to put on one handed
  • Left-handed Orientation: Designed to be worn on your left hand only

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. If you are troubleshooting your CPAP therapy, the Checkme O2 Max integrates seamlessly with OSCAR (Open Source CPAP Analysis Reporter). You can export your overnight oxygen data as a binary file directly from the ViHealth app or desktop software. Once imported into OSCAR, your second-by-second SpO2 and pulse rate will overlay perfectly with your CPAP’s airflow, pressure, and leak rate charts.

Yes. Unlike cheap aviation or sports oximeters that use the “FDA Registered” loophole, the Checkme O2 Max (officially listed as the Oxiband by Viatom) is a Class II Medical Device. It has undergone rigorous clinical testing and holds an official 510(k) clearance (K191088), proving to the U.S. government that it is substantially equivalent to hospital-grade equipment for safety and accuracy (FDA.Gov).

According to the Sleep Foundation, normal blood oxygen levels typically range from 95% to 100% for healthy individuals. However, if your blood oxygen levels drop to or below 88% for five or more minutes during sleep, it may be a clinical sign of a sleep-related breathing disorder like obstructive sleep apnea.

For biohackers, optimizing your breathing to keep this number pinned at 96% or higher all night is the ultimate goal for systemic recovery. If your Checkme O2 Max consistently alerts you to readings below 90%, you should consult your healthcare provider and export your PDF report for them to review.

No, a subscription is not required to access your core data. The free version offers everything you would need.

While ViHealth does offer an optional Premium subscription (currently around $19.99 for 3 months or $74.99 for a year) for advanced AI analysis and expanded cloud features, you do not need it. The free base version of the app allows you to view your overnight graphs, store your history, and freely export your high-resolution CSV and PDF sleep reports without ever paying a dime.

A pulse oximeter works by acting like a tiny, smart flashlight. It shines two different types of light through your finger: a regular red light and an invisible infrared light. Oxygen-rich blood is bright red and absorbs more infrared light, while oxygen-poor blood is darker and absorbs more red light. The sensor measures the light that pulses with your heartbeat, filtering out skin and bone, and compares the ratio of absorbed light against a built-in lookup table to estimate your SpO2 percentage.

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